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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1965-02-12

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1965-02-12, page 01

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Vol. 43. No. 7
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1965 — 10 ADAR, 5725
39 Davoteil fo American and Jewish Ideals
Final Plans Made For Hadassah Donor
Hadassah's plans for the 26th Annual Donor Affair have been announced by the co-chairmen Mrs. Bernard Schoitenstein and Mrs. Samuel Eisen.stein.
Donor night i.s February 21, nt Temple Tifereth Israel, at 6:30 p.m. A .sherry hour, ho.=;led by Dr, and Mrs. Malcolm Robbins will be folIo\ve<i by a full course meat dinner, catered by the Hlxecutivc Caterers.
Joe Weisberg. popular Columbus entertainer will be at the piano throughout the evening.
The Donor program will feature raconteur, singer and comedian Emil Cohen.
A second highlight will be the ap¬ pearance of Mrs. Max Matzkin, a naUonal vice president of Hadassah. She brings with her a keen under¬ standing of the aims and objectives of Hadassah, and of Israel.
The Hadassah Donor Affair sup¬ ports the Hadassah Medical Organi¬ zation in Israel. The medical center consists of 21 buildings, including schools of medicine, dentistry, and nursing; A 500 bed hospital, and an out-patient clinic that serves 250,000 patients annually.
There is still time for pledges to be made to group presidents or group donor chairmen.
In addition to Mrs. Schottenstein
and Mrs. Eisenstein. the executive committee consists of Mesdames: Je.sse Eisen. program; Perry Sin¬ ton. publicity; Joseph Haas, decora¬ tions; Victor Ringer, records; Ber¬ nard Schlessinger. ad book; and Ben Eisenstein. fund raising chair¬ man.
Chapter Presidont is Mrs. Michael B. Karr. the group presidents this year are: Mrs. Carl Mellman. Chai; Mrs. Donald Cohen, Liloh; Mrs. Morris Swedlow. Szold; Mrs. Robert Paine. Mitzvah; Mrs. Sanford Sha¬ piro. Ziona; Mrs. Harold Harris, Shalom; and Mrs. Morris Lessure. B&P.
Group pledge chairmen are: Mesdames Mary Freedman. B&P; Fred Fischer and Leon Mark. Chai; Morris Ojalvo. Ziona; Barbara Chalfie. Mitzvah; Fred Roland. Sholom; Martin Greenberg and Jules Duga. Liloh.
Left lo right are: Mr. I'.lm. 1_i_'_'i tein, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Litt. Seaie<l, Mrs. Hen Ei.sen.stein, who will be attend¬ ing the Hadas.sah Donor Affair.
The World's Week
Compiled from JTA and WUP Reporfs
BON.N, (JTA)—A storm of prole<-;it throughout West Ger¬ many marked the P^rankfurt court verdicts handed down against two foiiner SS aides to Adolf Eichmann, one of whom was acquitted. The two, former SS Lt. Col. Herman Krumey and former SS Oapt. Otto Htmsche, were charged with helping Eichmann tx) send hundreds of thousands of Hungarian Jews to Nazi tleath ciunps.
Hunsche was acciuitted of ctiarges of complicty in the murdei- of moi'e than 300,000 Jews. Krumey was sentenced to five yeai's at hard labor. Since he has served almost five years of pre-trial detention, he will only have to serve a few months of his sentence.
C;hief Pro.secutor Hans Grossman, who had askecl for maximum sontence.s of life imprisonment for both former Nazis, said he would appeal.
wa.shington; (JTA)—Seruitor Abraham A. Riblcoff, ConnecUcuit Democrat, introtluced a resolution, with the backing of 68 other Senators as co-spon.sors, urging CongresvS to condemn (li.sci-iminution again.sl Jews and other religious minoriUt^ in the Soviet Union. The rt>solution charged that Soviet Jews had been singlcxl out "for extreme pimi.shment for aUege<l economic offen.ses through confiscaUon, closing of Jewish cemeteries and by arresting rabbis and lay re ligious ieadei-s."
ALB.ANI', (JT.A)—.loseph Zarelzyi, New York State Senator of Manhattean w:is electo<l Senate majority leader this week, Mr. Zaretzki, 62, for many yeai-s minority leader in the State Senate, was born in Poland and brought lo New Yoi-k as ¦ a child. Educ;ited in New York, he has \nxn in public office for :i5 years. He Is a mem¬ ber of the .lewish War 'Veterans, the Zionist Organization of America and H'nai H'rith.
AHBl'KV I'AKK, .N. J. (JT.A)—Rabbi Israel Miller, president of the Rabbinical Council of America, i-epresenting 900 Ortihodox i-abbis, annoujiceci the participation of the Rabbinical Council of America in the formation of an inter- nalionial Orthodox agency to deal wiUr Uie problems of Jewish religious and social life in all parts of the world."
Allen Gundersheimer, Sr.
Re-Elected President Of Heritage House
Allen Gundersheimer. Sr. has been re-elected president of Heri¬ tage House.
Other officers elected at the an¬ nual meeting on January 31 were Mark Feinknopf, Mrs. Jack Res¬ ler. Dr. Jack Silberstein and Sol Zell, vice presidents; Ralph Rosen¬ thal, secretary; Robert Weiler, Sr., treasurer; and Don Erkis, associate treasurer.
Re-elected for three-year board terms ending in 1967 were Don Er¬ kis. Dr. Milton Goodman. Mrs. Simon Lazarus, Moe Garek, Her¬ bert Levy, Dr. M. A. Krakoff, Sam Schlonsky, Mark Feinknopf, David (conflnutd on paga A)
Jewish Organizations Divided On Federal Aid To Education
Washington, (JTA)—.lewish organizations .split this week in taking stands on President .lohnson's propo.sed fe<leral aid to education, joining with other organizations in rai.sing the church-state issue he had tried to avoid.
Two orthodox Jewish grou|)s, Agudatb Israel of America and the National Society ff'ir Hebrew Day Schools, .supported the Administration's multi-million dollar .'x.-hool aid hill. This was expected, since both
groups have consistently argued that the constitutional issue should not bar help to hard-pressed religi¬ ously-sponsored schools.
The current bill seeks to skirt the issue by providing aid to children in low income families, rather than to schools, and by providing $100.- 000,000 to help build "shared time" teaching facilities for both public and religious school pupils.
Rabbi Morris Sherer of the Agu- dath Israel contended before the Senate Subscommittee on Educa¬ tion, that the issue was educational, not religious. He added that his organization was "especially grati¬ fied" that the bill did not "arbi¬ trarily" ignore the educational •needs of pupils in religiously ori¬ ented elementary and secondary schools.
Harold Goldin, testifying for the American Jewish Congress, as¬ serted that federal aid to parochial schools would have a "disastrous effect" on American education. The
BELLERINGERS ANNOUNCE PLANS FOR LUNCeN, MARCH 4 AT ILONKA'S
Mrs. David Roth and Mrs. Samuel Goixlon, co-ch;urmen of the Hellei-ingers division of the 'Women's Division, United lewish Fund and Council, jointly announced at a meeting on Thur-sday, Feb. 'I, at the home of Mrs. Roth, that the annual luncheon for Belleringers wouJd take place on Thursday, March It Ilonka's I^rovincial House.
Cooperating with the co-chairmen are Mrs. Sanford Topolo¬
sky and Mrs. Ed Stan, invitations; VIrs. Mclvin Furman and Mrs. Morrey Tarcov. decorations; Mrs. Bernard Friedman, reservations; Mrs. Norman Mathless and Mrs. Walter Robinson, solicitations; Mrs. Irving Schuster and Mrs. Cbdy Zelizer, mechanics; Mrs. Norman Arndt. luncheon arrangements, Mrs. Robert Aronson, program, and Mrs. Bernard Frank, hostesses.
The Belleringers is a group of the Women's Division of UJFC.
soliciting funds for the United Jewish Appeal campaign from women in the $50 to $199.00 range. The campaign needs for 1965 are great. LocaUy. the OSU Hillel Foundation, the Columbus Hebrew School. Heritage House, the Jewish Center and the Jewish Family Ser¬ vice, receive aissistance from this once-a-year campaign. The Hillel Foundation at Ohio University in Athens also receives assistance from Columbus, thereby providing [continuad on paga 4)
organization opposes federal funds for books and other educational ma¬ terials and to the shared-time facili¬ ties proposed in the bill.
The American Jewish Committee came out for the bill, subject to qualifications, particularly inclusion
of a provision for judicial review.
Morris B. Abram AJCommiltee president, appeared before the House Subcommittee on Education to declare that the AJCommittee's primary concern was centered on the "child benefit aspects" of the new bill.
He said that "as long as the slate or federal govtrnment does not aid religion or religious education or church-related institutions; so long as its grant-of-aid is extended to the protection and improvement pt
(continuad on page 4)
HUBERT HUMPHREY PRINCIPAL SPEAKER AT INTERNATIONAL BONOS CONFERENCE
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey will be the principal speaker at the ]96,'3 State of Israel Bond International Inaugural Conference to be held from FMday. Feb. 19 through Sunday, Febi-uary 21 at the Fontainebleau Hotel In Miami, it was announce<i by Abraham Feinberg, president of the Israel Bond Organization.
The Vice President will aiddress the conference at a dinner on Sunday evening, Feb. 21 at
which the guest of honor will be Sir Isaac Wolfson. noted British industrialist and philanthropist.
The conference will formally open a drive to sell $100,000,000 in Israel Bonds during 1965 in the United Stales. Canada. Latin America and Western Europe, to help finance Israel's programs of wider indus- trialization^nd immigrant absorp¬ tion. )
During 1984. the Israel Bond campaign produced a record of $85,380,350 in sales, exceeding its quoU of $85,000,000 for the year.
Sir Isaac W Ifson is one of the outstanding personalities of British public life. From modest beginnings
as a salesman in rural Scotland, he has built up the Great Universal Stores Ltd. as the largest retail operation in England.
For many years. Sir Isaac has been prominently identified with a wide variety of civic and com¬ munal endeavors, and has been a foremost supporter of the Slato of Israel since its establi.shmenl.
Samuel Rothberg. national cam¬ paign chairman of the Israel Bond Organization, will be chairman of the Inaugural Conference. Co-chair¬ men will be Louis H. Boyar, chair¬ man of the Board of Governors, and Ira Guilden. national chairman of Israel Bonds.
•.^ Left to riglit, aie Mrs Ed Stan, Invitation co-chairman; Mrs. Samuel Goixlon, Belleringer co-chairman; Mrs. Walter Rohiii.son ami Mrs. Norman Mathless, solicitation co chair¬ men, and Mr-s. Sanford Topolosky, invitation co-chairman.
Left to right, Mra. Raymond KaJi."., chairman, Women's DivMon; Mrs. Irving Schuster, mechanics; Mrs. William Was.sersli'OMi, advisor; Mrs. Cody Zellzer, mechanics; anti Mrs. David Hoth, co<'halrman, Belleringers.
UJFC FACULTY SECTION ANNOUNCES 1965 CAMPAIGN KICKOFF EVENT
The Ohio Slate University Faculty Section for the 1905 UJFC campaign will hold its kickoff meeUng, Thursday, Feb. 18, 1965, 8 p.m. at the home of Dr. .and Mrs. Theodore N. Beck¬ man. Dr. Beckman is .serving his second term as chairman of this section.
Working with Dr. Beckman in the capacity of vice chair¬ men are: Dr. Irving Abramovitz, FVed Grail, Dr. Marvin Fox, Dr. Simon Dinitz and Dr. Hershel J. Hausman.
The program for the evening will be a panel discussion. The partici- panls names and topics follow.
Dr. Abramovitz is Associate Pro¬ fessor of business organization at OSU. Dr. Abramovitz is also a consultant in industrial manage¬ ment and has taught courses in production planning and statistical analysis.
Dr. Marvin Fox, Professor of Philosophy, will discuss "Israel's Internal Problems."
Dr. Fox is an outstanding teacher as evidenced by his selection' as Professor of the Year Teaching Award at OSU for 1962. He has been deeply involved in Jewish matters as evidenced by his many articles in "Judaism." "Jewish Parent," "t>Iational Jewish Month¬ ly;" etc.; and his comprehensive studies of major Jewish thinkers, especially Maimonidcs.
Rabbi Kaplan has been director of B'nai B'rilh Hillel F.aundation at the Ohio Stale University since 1935. His topic will be "Israel as a Nation-Stale." Rabbi Kaplan is a past president of the University Religious Council at OSU. the Ohio (continued on paga 4)
Chronicling
The News
Editorial 2
Society 5, 6, 7
Teen Scene 8
Sports », 10, II
Synagogues 12
Shopping Guide 12
Real Estate 14
Leon Schottenstein
A.A. ELECTS LEON SCHOTTENSTEIN AS NEW PRESIDENT
Mr. Leon Schottenstein was elec¬ ted president and Arthyr Katz, vice president, of Agudas Achim Congre¬ gation at the annual election meet¬ ing. Sunday. Jan. 17, 19f)5. Re-elec¬ ted to office were Abe I. Yenkin, treasurer; Samuel S. Ro.scnlhal. fi¬ nancial secretary; Edwin Solomon, recording secretary; and Harry Goldberg, chairman of Clievra Ka- disha.
Newly elected board members include Maurice L. Bleich, 1. M. Harris, Harry B. Kallman, Martin Kaufher. Morris Mendel, Alfred Rudnick and Herbert Wagner.
Reelected lo the board are Arthur (continued on paga 4}